There's a new serial killer haunting Los Angeles, targeting young women in their twenties and thirties. The Gryphon, named as such because of the small clay gryphon statues he leaves in the hands of his headless, horribly defiled victims.
SHIVER by Brian Harper, released in 1992, is another book I bought at Salvation Army ten years ago but never got around to reading until now... and wow! Brian Harper isn't a household name, but he should be. Honestly, this should be up there with SILENCE OF THE LAMBS by Thomas Harris. The writing in SHIVER—which was Harper's debut under this particular pen name—is so insanely descriptive, I almost felt I was being hypnotized by the amount of detail, mesmerized by the depth he brings to each of the lead characters. This book easily painted vivid scenes in my mind. It's incredibly disturbing, too, so beware.
What really surprised me was how much his style reminds me of Dean Koontz from about 2005 onwards. I've read quite a bit of Koontz, and if you would've put Koontz's name on this before I read it I wouldn't have suspected it was anyone else.
I absolutely have to read Brian Harper's other novels, as well as the books he writes under his current pen name, Michael Prescott.
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐/5